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Read the excerpts from “Take the Tortillas Out of Your Poetry” and “Speaking Arabic.”

My friend had concluded that if he took his language and culture out of his poetry, he stood a better chance of receiving a fellowship. He took out his native language, the poetic patois of our reality, the rich mixture of Spanish, English, pachuco and street talk which we know so well. In other words, he took the tortillas out of his poetry, which is to say he took the soul out of his poetry.

At a neighborhood fair in Texas, somewhere between the German Oom-pah Sausage Stand and the Mexican Gorditas booth, I overheard a young man say to his friend, “I wish I had a heritage. Sometimes I feel—so lonely for one.” And the tall American trees were dangling their thick branches right down over his head.

Which best states how the structures of both excerpts support ideas about cultural diversity?
Each incorporates non-English words.
Each incorporates academic words.
Each incorporates offensive words.
Each incorporates nonsense words.

Respuesta :

Answer:Each incorporates non-English words.

Explanation:

They are both having a words that are not English origin but the people can understand their meaning. Those words are: pachuco, patois,tortillas and more which we see at the first look that they are non-English.

Those words are not academic ones and they are surely not offensive. They are making a sense for many people who can understand them.

Answer:

A) Each incorporates non-English words.

Explanation:

took the test on edge